alpine routes - Climb Magazine
Transcription
alpine routes - Climb Magazine
60836_48 27/5/08 12:22 Page 48 HAVE YOU BEEN DREAMING OF SOME BIG LONG ROUTES THIS SUMMER IN THE ALPS? WELL PERHAPS YOU CAN FIND THE ADVENTURE YOU’RE AFTER WITHOUT GETTING ON THE PLANE. FOUR OF THE UK’S MOST EXPERIENCED ALPINISTS GIVE YOU SOME HOME GROWN ALTERNATIVES FOR A BRITISH ALPINE EXPERIENCE. UK alpine routes TOWER RIDGE BEN NEVIS Guidebook: Ben Nevis Publ. by SMC by Alan Kimber Alan is a British Mountain Guide with over 20 seasons in the Alps, climbs in the Himalaya, Alaska, New Zealand and South America as well as his beloved Scotland. His website www.westcoast-mountainguides.co.uk is the home of his guiding company as well as regularly updated conditions reports. Fancy getting a request to pen a few words about training for the Alps, but not to include any snowy stuff! Now, as far as I can make out the Alps is not yet completely devoid of snow so any chance of snow climbing in Britain must be included in any training strategy. Having got that off of my chest, let’s try to put things into context. In the Alps, unlike in Britain it is normal to stay away from bad weather. That’s not to say you need to reduce the importance of navigation, just that it comes into play far less often. Route choice, fitness and success on a short Alpine trip are key to an enjoyable time. Most first time alpinists will head for snowy routes with some rock scrambling at around 3000-4000m in altitude. Don’t go out to the Alps with a monster tick list and fire yourself up the first 4000m route in the book. Take time to acclimatise and ease into some simple climbs that you will enjoy and succeed on. Nothing worse than failure to spoil a good holiday. Fitness and route choice are key to success and what better place to gain that fitness than on Ben Nevis during the spring. Days are long and large snowfields persist into May. A favourite trip would be to pick a good spell of weather and either camp or bivvy in Coire Leis, well above the 48 JUL 08 CIC Hut. Reduce your pack weight to Alpine proportions, kick out the ‘kitchen-sink’ which Brits appear to carry a lot and go for some long days to improve your stamina and endurance. Leave the rock boots and chalk-bag at home. Ben Nevis provides any number of combinations for ‘big-boot’ mountaineering. As with Alpine days it might be worth checking out some of the easy descent routes first and use Ledge Route for this exercise. The Carn mor Dearg arête and Ledge Route combo is a prime starter day. If you arrive back early at the bivvy try one of the easier routes on the Douglas Boulder or First Platform of N.E. Buttress in the afternoon. Having got the hang of the place and your level of fitness you may wish to consider Tower Ridge. Slicing through the centre of the north face and surrounded on all sides by great views and steep cliffs, this climb is truly Alpine in nature. It provides climbing teams with plenty of route finding issues and decisions as to how to use the rope, whether on short pitches or moving together roped. I well remember my first ascent over 30 years ago in the summer when I traversed left too soon below the Great Tower. Missing the Eastern Traverse, I wound up amongst some worryingly steep ground. Friends who had opted to traverse the Carn Mor Dearg arête were treated to a ‘ring-side seat’ performance from the summit, as I scratched around and eventually succeeded in staying in touch with the rock and gaining the top of the Great Tower. You can finish with a descent of one of the big grade I snowy gullies, but be wary of spring cornice collapse in thaw conditions. Hopefully you will strike a settled period of good weather with overnight frosts and be able to include as much snow work as possible on the rock hard snow-ice. This is what you are aiming for in the Alps. You should also consider descending Tower Ridge if your Alpine aims are towards AD grade routes. Combining as many of the long Nevis ridges in one push as you can will certainly give an idea of how fit you are. Start up Observatory Ridge and descend either Ledge Route or Tower Ridge before going for N.E. Buttress and a Tower Ridge descent. On most of this ground you should involve short-roping techniques, as that is how you will move more safely and efficiently on Alpine terrain. Taking pitches and/or abseiling, although possibly safer, only leads to slow climbing, so get your ropework and short rope decision-making up to speed. Unless of course you prefer spending time shivering on a cold Alpine ledge after being stomped all over by quicker alpinists heading for the bars of Zermatt or Chamonix! By the way, if you are a novice alpiniste keep away from these two spots initially and head for more simple peaks around Central Switzerland or Saas Fee/Grund. You are much more likely to find less technically demanding and achievable peaks in these areas. So, now you have knocked off all the snowy options on Ben Nevis in the springtime, keep the momentum going by visiting the Isle of Skye for more rocky projects during May and June. Also, practise prussiking and hoisting in case you find yourself at the bottom of an icy glacial slot. In fact Ben Nevis’s Observatory Gully is just spot-on for that purpose in late April, May and early June. Some big, deep snowy caves start to appear beneath Orion Face, Zero Gully and Point Five Gully. Not only can these areas provide very real crevasse rescue scenarios, but also you may find a few bits of good kit to supplement your summer Alpine rack! 60836_49 27/5/08 12:22 Page 49 Right: Tower Ridge on 19th May this year. ABACUS MOUNTAINEERING don’t go out to the alps with a monster tick list and fire yourself up the first 4000m route in the book... take time to acclimatise and ease into some simple climbs that you will enjoy and succeed on. ALAN KIMBER Left:Johnny Baird negotiates the infamous Tower Gap, a very exposed point on Tower Ridge and the scene of many epics. CUBBY IMAGES JUL 08 49 60836_50 27/5/08 12:23 Page 50 CIOCH WEST - ARROW ROUTE INTEGRITY (MVS 4b), 350m Perhaps the finest route combination is Cioch West – Arrow Route – Integrity, which weighs in at nine stars worth of guidebook quality and offers 10 contrasting pitches. MARTIN MORAN Arrow Route, first climbed in 1944 in a totally unprotected run-out. MARTIN MORAN 50 JUL 08 Sron na Ciche, Coire Lagan, Isle of Skye Guidebooks: Scottish Rock Climbs Publ. SMC (2005), Skye and the Hebrides Vol 1 Publ. SMC (1996) by Martin Moran Martin has a long list of mountain achievements from Himalayan first ascents to a non-stop traverse of the 75 4000m peaks of the Alps in 52 days. A British Alpine guide he provides alpine courses through www.moran-mountain.co.uk The rambling walls of Sron na Ciche offer one of Britain’s best venues for Alpinelength rock climbs. From early explorations of MacKenzie, Collie, Abraham and Mallory through to the post-war pioneering of Cunningham and Walsh, and more recently Cuthbertson and MacLeod, these sombre cliffs have long attracted our leading activists. The superb rough gabbro and striking lines are complemented by scale and complexity. Here will be found some of our best mid-grade trad routes and an ideal training venue for budding Alpinists. The central section of the cliffs features the famous Cioch – a projecting prow which sits incongruously at the apex of a sweep of lower slabs and guards access to a steeper 80m upper buttress. Combining one of six excellent routes up the slabs with a 60m clamber up or round the Cioch and a spectacular finale powering through the overhangs of the headwall you create an expedition with over 1000ft of climbing, which will test route-finding skills, stamina and efficiency of rope management. Choose any standard from Severe to E3. Three of the finest linkages are:Cioch Direct (S) – Slab Corner (D) – Wallwork’s Route (VD): an ultra-traditional outing. Cioch Direct features a polished chimney crux, surmountable either by ‘poise and elegance’ or ‘elephantine struggles’ according to the guidebook. Expect the latter! Wallwork’s looks improbable for a V.Diff but the guide reminds us that it used to be graded Diff “when real men and women still wore nailed boots.” Cioch Grooves (HVS, 5a) – Cioch Nose (VD) – Trophy Crack (HVS, 5b): vintage 1950s with a delicate solution to the Cioch Grooves crux, a delightful and underrated pitch up the arête of the Cioch and a strenuous layback to surmount the Trophy Crack. Bastinado (E1, 5b) – Overhanging Crack (E2, 5c) – Atropos (E1, 5b): demanding corners and cracks finishing with an airy wander up the headwall. For morning sloths the crag is the perfect choice. Sron na Ciche gets sun from midday till late-evening from mid-April to mid-August and the base is reached by an easy walk of 90 minutes from Glen Brittle campsite. The cliff dries sufficiently for climbing within 36 hours of heavy rain and residual wet streaks on the Severes can usually be passed thanks to the excellent friction. Perhaps the finest route combination is Cioch West – Arrow Route – Integrity, which weighs in at nine stars worth of guidebook quality and offers 10 contrasting pitches. Cioch West offers some perplexing climbing for a Severe. After 70m of warm-up cracks traverse right along a terrace below a steeper middle bastion. A slanting corner gains 20m and is quitted by an awkward leftward traverse above the bastion, which is remarkably exposed and committing for its grade. Easier slabs lead diagonally left in two long pitches to the terrace below the Cioch. Here the leader must climb confidently with limited protection to avoid getting bogged down in minor route-finding conundrums. By scrambling left along the terrace the magnificent sweep of slabs bounding the left side of The Cioch is reached. Arrow Route takes the central line, first climbed in 1944 in a totally unprotected run-out. After starting up a left-slanting crack, the leader must launch directly up the blank-looking slab. Happily the rock is magnificently dimpled and in afternoon sunshine this 45m pitch can turn into a romp, with assurance from occasional solid cam placements. Arrow Route finishes in a dyke beneath the impending headwall. A formidable crack-line cuts through the overhangs. This is Integrity, a contender for the best Hard Severe in Britain. Strenuous initial moves lead to a roof, where, to one’s delight, large pockets appear to allow an elegant step-over. The corner-crack continues in sustained fashion with one awkward bulge until a final steeper section. It is recommended to tackle this direct at sensational VS 4b standard, but most will play chicken and sneak over right to an easier exit. Regrettably, Integrity was upgraded to Mild VS in the 1996 SMC guidebook, but should always remain the benchmark of its original grade. If sacks have been left at the bottom, you now face a long painful descent of Eastern Gully in rock shoes. It’s better to travel light, carrying trainers, snacks and drinks up the route. Then you can enjoy a scenic walk-off down the western ridge of Sron na Ciche towards Loch Brittle. Few real Alpine days are finer. 60836_51 27/5/08 12:23 Page 51 Paul Torrode on Sword of Gideon (VS) Applecross. JAMES EDWARDS The crag currently has nothing harder than HVS, with the majority of the routes at HS and VS and up to five pitches in length. JAMES EDWARDS Raph Bleakley on the 3rd pitch of the Cioch Nose. TOM THORP CIOCH NOSE (S, 125m), SGURR A’CHAORACHAIN, APPLECROSS Guidebook: Northern Highlands South publ. SMC by James Edwards James is something of a North West devotee having pioneered many challenging winter ascents on the likes of Beinn Bhan and Beinn Dearg Mor. You can read about his adventures at www.highmountaineering.com As a youth I (mis)spent too much of my time immersed in books about Alpine climbing and wondering just how I could go about getting into it. Subsequently I went to university in Sheffield to study climbing on a more practical level. There I met my long time climbing partner, great friend and first mentor: Myles English. We started out on the single pitch routes in the Peak and worked our way up the grades before venturing onto longer routes during weekends away to North Wales and the Lakes. When the first year of our studies finished we had both failed to an impressive degree, getting the lowest grades in the entire year group. In one exam I remember signing my name and staring out the window for ten minutes before walking out with my climbing sack to hitch to Stanage Edge; it was far too nice a day to be stuck inside. However, the time was not wasted and in that first year we had already graduated with honours in gritstone climbing. As we’d been climbing several days a week with no time for work or study we didn’t have enough money to go to the Alps that summer. So we decided on the next best thing – Scotland. Without realising it we were planning exactly the right thing; a ‘traditional’ progression from single to double to multi-pitch climbing before we made the leap to the Alpine arena. We even discovered the art of moving together almost by accident on the long Scottish cliffs (we both needed to move as the midges were eating us alive!) JUL 08 51 60836_52 27/5/08 12:23 Page 52 One of the places that I remember most fondly from that summer is the Applecross peninsular. These spectacular sandstone cliffs jut out of the hillsides like buried dinosaurs waking from the Cretaceous. The views down to the valley and the sea beyond are something else. We started low in the grades and made for the ultra classic Cioch Nose. This 125m**** Severe climbs the prow of the Sgùrr A’Chaorachain crag by a devious winding line that tested our route finding abilities (yes, we left the guidebook in the tent). We made light work of the four pitches and were delayed only in pausing to admire the golden eagle that circled above inspecting our progress. The angle kicked back towards the summit but the V. Diff ground still warranted a rope and so we practised taking coils and moving safely and efficiently till we could walk downhill back to the summit car park and hitch back to the tent. The crag currently has nothing harder than HVS, with the majority of the routes at HS and VS and up to five pitches in length. Myles and I went back to this area several times as it often missed the worst of the bad weather of the higher mountain crags and the rough sandstone still has good friction in the wet. Sgùrr A’Chaorachain also has a south face that lies a five minute walk up steep ground from the famous Bealach na Bà road (remember: we’re practising Alpine climbing here, not walk-ins!) This proximity belies its Alpine nature and route-finding skills need to be sharp as one could easily get off line. The classic of the crag is Sword of Gideon, a superb clean mountain ***VS. The routes range from one to five pitches from Hard Severe to E2 but with stacks to go at for the VS leader. If you’re looking for something more sporting, Gideon’s Wrath (E1)** and Orcrist (E2)** provide good entertainment. It’s perfectly possible and actually quite desirable, given the broken nature of the descent, to set up a multiple abseil descent and combine several routes in the day. I can’t emphasise enough how important an Alpine skill it is to be able to get down safely and efficiently in this manner. You will do well to remember the wise words: The summit is only halfway. The majority of accidents in Alpine terrain occur on the descent when your energies are dulled from a long day. Problems can occur when the rope gets stuck, cut or a sloppy inspection of an abseil anchor results in a catastrophic failure and an early grave. The majority of Alpine routes will need a descent strategy, be it abseil, down climb or in the case of the north face of the Aiguille Du Midi, a very nice téléphérique straight back down to Chamonix for tea and medals in the bar. After that first summer in Scotland we managed to save enough money in the next year from our weekly student budget (and just about avoid getting scurvy) to buy a train ticket to the Dolomites. We thought that we were now beginning the first stage of our Alpine apprenticeships; but in reality we’d actually started many months before as we grasped that first Applecross sandstone hold and stepped up into the sky. ‘Skeleton Ridge is white and has a cheval sections’ I announced unhelpfully. MICK FOWLER SKELETON RIDGE, MXS, THE NEEDLES, ISLE OF WIGHT Guidebook: Southern Sandstone publ. The Climbers’ Club by Mick Fowler Lorraine Smythe traversing the amazing chalk ridge line of Skeleton Ridge on The Needles, Isle of Wight. MICK FOWLER 52 JUL 08 Having trained on the looser parts of Britain’s coastline Mick Fowler has gone on to establish some of the finest Alpine style routes across the Himalaya, including the North Face of Siguniang which won him and Paul Ramsden the Piolet D’Or. Ian Parnell rang: “Could you write about an Alpine route in the UK?” He went on to divulge that he was speeding towards crisp and sparkling Scottish conditions whilst asking me to sweat over a keyboard. I pondered. “Skeleton Ridge is white and has a cheval sections,” I announced unhelpfully. “Great.” “Doesn’t matter about the sea?” “No, that’ll be fine.” And so I found myself sat contemplating the Alpine flavour of a 400ft chalk crest at the Needles end of the Isle of Wight whilst the Parnell was gleefully heading towards perfect Nevis hoar ice. It was 1984 when my urge to explore the chalk cliffs of southern Britain led me to the Isle of Wight. The nature of chalk climbing is delightfully varied – from solid flint-pulling at Beachy Head to axes and crampons in 60836_53 27/5/08 12:23 Page 53 Mark Pretty experiencing exposure to match the Alps on the final pitch of Skeleton Ridge. IAN PARNELL the compact sponge-like cliffs at Dover. Andy Meyers had done a reconnaissance visit to the Isle of Wight and decreed that the chalk there was ice-axe-and-crampon chalk. And so, duly weighted down with plastic boots, crampons and ice screws Andy, Lorraine Smythe and I attracted curious stares from weekend walkers as we strolled across the rolling green downs to the Needles Battery coastguard lookout atop the cliffs overlooking the Needles. Having tied two ropes together a 300ft abseil took us to the deserted pebble beach of Scratchell’s Cove. It was here that I swung my axe enthusiastically at the chalk. “SHIT!” To my surprise it bounced uncomfortably off the rock hard surface. Lorraine collapsed laughing. Andy went rather quiet. It seemed that we were about to try a pure rock climb weighed down with some blatantly unnecessary ice climbing paraphernalia. First though we had to traverse to the headland where the crest began. And the tide was in… Several hours later I had been soundly abused for lack of expertise in tide table reading and Andy for poor chalk judgement but we had managed to traverse out to a point where we could at last gain the rock and climb to the crest of the ridge just behind the first pinnacle. This first pitch, being on the south side, was delightfully sheltered but up on the crest we were exposed to a cutting northerly wind. Enduring the chill wearing our full ice climbing equipment on a squintingly white crest the day was indeed acquiring an Alpine flavour. Soon though we were to hit a slight technical problem in the form of a 20ft steep step. A dither resulted and excuses poured forth. Wrong equipment, wind too strong, too cold, bad conditions, too late in the day... It was indeed feeling more and more like the Alps. An abseil off was in order. But the tide was in… Swimming in double boots whilst laden with axes, crampons and ice screws is not to be recommended but does tend to make the day more memorable. It was a soggy and disgruntled team which slowly jumared the 300ft back to the cliff-top. I then discovered that wet chalk turns readily to paste on fabric car seats. My car seats and suit trousers were never quite the same again. A few weeks later Lorraine and I were back at our previous highpoint. The sun shone and we wore rock boots and carried nuts and Friends. With good protection placed the step proved to be straightforward. This left me feeling slightly silly but opened the door to a fine a cheval section with one leg over the Solent and the other over the English Channel. A tower ahead looked challenging and had featured highly in our decision to abseil off last time. Now we were against it though the left side started to break to good holds and ledges. I began to get that special feeling that comes when a section which could result in failure looks as if it might go. With no more than VS climbing we were soon back on the crest above the tower. Another short knife edge section, a final wall and we were there. Alpine style on the south coast. JUL 08 53